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Black Tape For a Blue Girl is an American act formed in 1986. Their music incorporates elements of dark cabaret, gothic, rock, ethereal, ambient and neo-classical music.
Dark rock outfit Black Tape For A Blue Girl enters its 24th year with a new collection of sinister character sketches performed in theatrical cabaret style. Sam Rosenthal, the groups founder/keyboardist, is joined by vocalist Athan Maroulis (formerly of the pioneering electronic band Spahn Ranch) and guitarist/vocalist Valerie Gentile (formerly of The Cruxshadows).

"Musically sophisticated and immensely talented, wildly unusual and diverse in material and presentation, a Dada-esque circus carnival run amuck, and just plain good ‘not-always-so-clean’ fun." Boston Survival Guide

Copal - (Set time: 10:00 PM)

Copal sets an evocative tone; lavish voices of violin and cello flicker against a twilight scape of electronic swells and textures, impelled by a driving rhythmic sense, and original melodies steeped in global musical traditions. NYC-based, Copal is lead by violinist/composer Hannah Thiem surrounded by an impressive cast of talented collaborators: Isabel Castellvi (cello), Rob Chamberlain (drums), Lorenzo Wolff (bass), Tripp Dudley (percussion). The band's sound is a steampunk melding of styles set on a world stage. Nordic melodies ride Middle-Eastern rhythms into the halls of a remembered past, Hungarian riffs blush hotly against Spanish-cadence, opulent harmonies from far-gone depths. "Beguiling" (First Coast News) and "artistically beautiful yet darkly tantalizing" (Maximum Ink), like lucid dreams, the sounds of Copal will take you away.

“Torture chamber pop.” “Darkwave jazz.” “Siren rock.” These are a few of the many attempts to describe the sound of Jaggery, an art-rock collective which weaves harp, viola, piano, contrabass, and drum kit into a universe of its own, setting the scene for “one of the most beautiful voices in modern music.” Powerful enough to harness the fiery churnings beneath a volcano as well as the ethereal light of a dying star, frontwoman Singer Mali’s voice regularly leaves listeners viscerally stunned and with goosebumps.